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Satyrium sacculatum is an orchid species identified by (Rendle) Rolfe in D.Oliver & auct. suc. (eds.) in 1898. Culture information and photos for this orchid are commonly detailed under the currently accepted name of Satyrium coriophoroides.
ORIGIN: Found in Cameroon, Burundi, Rwanda, Zaire, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Sudan, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe in grasslands at elevations of 1800 to 2850 meters.
DESCRIPTION: Medium to giant sized, cool to cold growing, glabrous terrestrial with both a sterile stem carrying 4 to 5, upper 1 to 2, lanceolate to elliptic-lanceolate, leaves and a slender to rather robust fertile stem almost totally enveloped by appressed, lanceolate, acute sheathing leaves that blooms in the summer through fall on a terminal, erect, narrowly cylindrical, 3.23 to 10 [8 to 25 cm] long, rather densely many flowered inflorescence with lanceolate floral bracts and carrying white to crimson colored flowers.
FLOWER SIZE: 0.4 inches [1 cm]
-- information provided by Jay Pfahl, author of the
Internet Orchid Species Encyclopedia (IOSPE).
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